Preferred Label : madreporite;
Uberon definition : The madreporite is an opening used to filter water into the water vascular system
of echinoderms. It is visible as a small red or yellow button-like structure, looking
like a small wart, on the aboral surface of the central disk of a sea star. Close
up, it is visibly structured, resembling a 'madrepore' colony. From this, it derives
its name. The water vascular system of the sea star consists of a series of seawater-filled
ducts that function in locomotion and feeding and respiration. Its main parts are
the madreporite, the stone canal, the ring canal, the radial canals, the lateral canals,
and the tube feet. The sieve-like madreporite allows entry of seawater into the stone
canal, which connects to the ring canal around the mouth. Five or more radial canals
extend from the ring canal, one in each arm above the ambulacral groove. From the
radial canals extend many lateral canals, each of which leads to a tube foot. Each
tube foot is a closed cylinder with muscular walls, having a sucker at the outer end
and a bulb-like ampulla at its inner end within the body cavity.;
Origin ID : 0009476;
part of
The madreporite is an opening used to filter water into the water vascular system
of echinoderms. It is visible as a small red or yellow button-like structure, looking
like a small wart, on the aboral surface of the central disk of a sea star. Close
up, it is visibly structured, resembling a 'madrepore' colony. From this, it derives
its name. The water vascular system of the sea star consists of a series of seawater-filled
ducts that function in locomotion and feeding and respiration. Its main parts are
the madreporite, the stone canal, the ring canal, the radial canals, the lateral canals,
and the tube feet. The sieve-like madreporite allows entry of seawater into the stone
canal, which connects to the ring canal around the mouth. Five or more radial canals
extend from the ring canal, one in each arm above the ambulacral groove. From the
radial canals extend many lateral canals, each of which leads to a tube foot. Each
tube foot is a closed cylinder with muscular walls, having a sucker at the outer end
and a bulb-like ampulla at its inner end within the body cavity.